MakeMyTrip Limited (MMYT) Q4 2020 earnings call dated Jun. 26, 2020
Corporate Participants:
Jonathan Huang — Vice President, Investor Relations
Deep Kalra — Founder and Group Executive Chairman
Rajesh Magow — Co-Founder & Group CEO
Mohit Kabra — Group Chief Financial Officer
Analysts:
Bruce Oren — Oren Limited — Analyst
Rishit Parikh — Nomura Securities — Analyst
Presentation:
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by and welcome to the MakeMyTrip Limited Fiscal 2020 Fourth Quarter and Full Year Earnings Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. [Operator Instructions].
I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker, Jonathan Huang, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Jonathan Huang — Vice President, Investor Relations
Thank you, Cindy. Welcome, everyone, to MakeMyTrip Limited’s fiscal 2020 fourth quarter and full year earnings call. I would like to remind everyone that certain statements made on today’s call are considered forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Safe Harbor provision of the U.S. Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements are not guarantees of future performance, are subject to inherent uncertainties and actual results may differ materially. Any forward-looking information relayed on this call speaks only as of this date and the company undertakes no obligation to update information to reflect changed circumstances. Additional information concerning these statements are contained in the Risk Factors and Forward-Looking Statements section of the company’s Annual Report on Form 20-F filed with the SEC on July 23, 2019. Copies of these filings are available from the SEC or from the company’s Investor Relations department.
I’m joined today by Deep Kalra, MakeMyTrip’s Founder, Group Chairman; Rajesh Magow, Co-Founder and Group CEO; and Mohit Kabra, our Group CFO.
I would now like to turn the call over to Deep, to begin our discussion for today.
Deep Kalra — Founder and Group Executive Chairman
Thank you, Jon. Welcome everyone to our fourth quarter and full year earnings call for fiscal year 2020. I hope everyone listening is staying safe and healthy. I’d like to begin by sharing my thoughts on the reality we are faced with today and how we, as market leaders, are managing through this crisis.
The ongoing global COVID-19 pandemic has severely disrupted the way we live and carry about our everyday lives. Since the February 25th report, published by the WHO, which called for travel restrictions or prohibition as a measure to combat COVID-19, regulatory travel curbs have impacted most of us across the world.
India’s stay-at-home orders had severely disrupted our domestic travel industry since March 25th, when the nationwide lockdown was implemented. This order had put a complete stop to all travel until the recent gradual lifting of restrictions on domestic flights, buses and hotels, which was on May 25th.
The disruptions to business have been unprecedented in our company’s history. To say that these are trying times for our team would be an understatement. However, I firmly believe that these are also the times when a company’s values and strengths are tested to the fullest.
To emerge stronger at the other end of the crisis, we focused on four key priorities. First and foremost, to ensure our employees’ health and safety; second, to relentlessly support our customers amidst the utter chaos due to the sudden lockdown and flight cancellations; third, to reduce our fixed expenses to minimize cash burn during the short-term; and lastly, to aid the government in handling of the pandemic, while supporting the vulnerable section of our society.
While my colleagues will share greater details on our cost optimization actions, I will elaborate more on the other three priorities.
During the earlier parts of the fiscal fourth quarter, as news of COVID-19 emerged, we began to equip our entire staff with the tools needed to work-from-home. To ensure our staff safety, we quickly implemented all the prescribed safety and hygiene protocols in all of our physical offices, which included fewer checks at the gates, social distancing and more frequent access to our on-site doctors and testing work-from-home at scale.
This helped us embrace lockdown measures swiftly, and we continue to operate from home with high levels of employee engagement, utilizing video conferencing to check in on their well-being, boost morale and maintain productivity.
Naturally, during this crisis, customer concerns were elevated as inbound query volumes spiked many fold due to high cancellations. In order to maintain customer’s high expectations of our brands, we rapidly expanded the facilities available for them to reach us for help. This included launching a new online web form where customers can submit urgent travel requests. This allowed us to better manage and prioritize travel changes expeditiously.
At the same time, we continued to improve our popular online self-service platform by working closely with supplier partners settings [Phonetic]. The ongoing investments has made it easier for customers to bypass our call centers, while making frequent changes to their trips.
We also rolled out dedicated FAQ support pages to clearly inform customers of each airlines policies during the pandemic. Concurrently, we leveraged social media and popular messaging systems to directly provide customers with ongoing updates and changes to policies regarding travel refunds and amendments.
Prior to the lockdown, we proactively worked with outsourcing partners to ensure continuity of service to handle the anticipated spike in customer call volumes. As a result of our comprehensive and proactive actions, we were successful in handling and resolving the large volume of customer queries. Of course, none of these efforts would have been possible without our own team and people.
I want to specifically take a moment to praise and thank them for going above and beyond the call-of-duty during this crisis to serve the needs of our customers, which we believe will help our brands bounce back in a much stronger position.
During the lockdown period, we heavily leaned into the MakeMyTrip Foundation to care for our community. We launched initiatives to support the testing and treatment costs of our frontline workers in the travel industry, including hotel staffs, bus drivers and tour guides. We also crowdsourced funds along with employee contributions to help the most vulnerable wage earners within the industry, who may have lost their jobs as a result of this lockdown. By working with our community partners, we were able to distribute food to those greatly affected with up to 10,000 cooked meals each day in the neighborhood surrounding our office.
Lastly, our technology team has also contributed immensely to help the government develop and launch COVID tracing app called Aarogya Setu. This app is aimed to help track and mitigate the spread of COVID-19 across the country. It helps by gathering micro and macro trends, including location level, extent of existing and potential spread, allowing administrative measures to be taken accordingly. It has also become an essential tool in the country’s gradual travel unlocking process. I’m pleased to share that this app has been downloaded over 130 million times and I’m especially proud that our small team of talented developers and engineers have been able to contribute to the welfare of our society in a very meaningful and direct way.
These are very challenging times for everyone and yet I remain optimistic as our Brazilian team has successfully weathered disruptions caused by the 9/11 terrorist attacks, the SARS outbreak in 2003 and the 2008 global financial crisis. The company has always emerged stronger competitively. I’m fully confident this time around will be no different.
What gives me further optimism is that we entered this crisis in a far stronger competitive and financial positioning than our peers and believe that gap will only widen as we begin our recovery.
Leading up to this quarter, we had made great progress in reducing our operating losses as our investments in the standalone hotel segment have come to full cycle. However, we realize that this crisis once again shifts the paradigm as we need to ensure the business survives through potentially zero travel and lockdown down conditions, which could extend for months and possibly quarters. We, therefore, acted swiftly and sharply, reducing our fixed costs to give us a runway of about two years even in such unforeseen lockdown.
Last year, when Trip.com Group increased its stake in the company, they had also called out their support for the company in terms of participating in future fundraising efforts. As we believe that we have enough liquidity to tight through this crisis, it’s always comforting to have their continued support as our key shareholder in such exceptional circumstances.
At this point, the good news is that the journey of recovery has begun as the government has relaxed domestic flight restrictions on May 25th, followed by relaxation of other travel-related restrictions since June 8th. For example, services like hotels, trains, intercity bus services are now gradually being restored in non-containment zones. We’re encouraged to see the level of interest and demand so far from users, albeit at low levels when compared to pre-COVID days. Looking forward, I believe that domestic travel in India will lead in the industries and our own business recovery.
The first wave of travelers following the relaxation of this lockdown has largely been folks who were stuck in a destination for work or otherwise when the lockdown was implemented in late March. We also believe essential business, family and medical travel will be one of the first drivers of the pent-up travel demand. This is likely to be followed by demand for self-drive or road trip holidays to destinations that can offer social distancing and travel deal seekers looking to get out of a long lockdown period in the country.
However, with international flight still grounded today, we believe outbound travel is likely to take longer to open up, given the multitude of travel restrictions that are in place. Currently, the Government of India has indicated that opening of international travel will be considered in July, along with creation of travel bubbles with certain countries that would allow access to Indians and vice versa.
But we have a long climb ahead. We have no doubt in the long run the travel business will rebound. As humans, we are naturally wired to travel and seek person connections and new travel experiences, whether it’s to visit family, friends or loved ones, to establish new business relationships or to seek adventure and experiences, it will inevitably happen. Probably, the days of carefree, leisure, discretionary travel will gradually return once the virus is adequately controlled or an effective treatment of vaccine gets developed.
It’s also worth reminding listeners that India’s travel market still offers multiple compelling segments which are still largely booked offline. We believe this pandemic will only push the pedal on digitization and drive online booking adoption even faster. As a result, we continue to invest during these challenging times to make sure our brands, technology and service platforms are ready to scale and support the rebound in demand.
With the level of service and experience that will be industry-leading and benchmark to world class standards, we believe we will continue to gain share within our industry in the long term and strengthen our market leadership position.
Now, I’d like to turn the call over to Rajesh to share how we are managing through this crisis as a company and our plans to re-emerge even stronger competitively.
Rajesh Magow — Co-Founder & Group CEO
Thanks, Deep, and greetings, everyone. I hope you’re all healthy and well during these unprecedented times. I would like to start by sharing a quick overview of how the fiscal fourth quarter progressed and how we quickly adapted our business as the virus outbreak unfolded.
Entering the quarter, we had planned to continue on our path of driving growth and share gains, with a focus on minimizing quarterly cash burn. For the month of January, customer demand and bookings was full on plan across all our lines of businesses. Starting the last week of February, as news flow of COVID-19 outbreaks in Southeast Asia and Europe increased, we began seeing cancellations and a decline in bookings across our outbound travel products, but domestic demand remained largely intact.
However, as we entered March, reports of increased COVID-19 infections in India began to dent the demand across all domestic lines of business. As a result, we quickly pivoted our operations to minimize cash burn by flexing variable and semi variable costs, in line with the reduction of revenue in the month of March.
As a result, we still achieved our goal of further narrowing adjusted operating losses down to $10.3 million or $5.5 million adjusted operating cash loss, if you add back depreciation expenses. We then followed up with a comprehensive review of our total cost structure to take some very difficult decisions on our fixed costs, including salary reductions, to ensure we had plenty of liquidity to see us through the crisis.
Starting in April, we implemented salary reductions to further preserve cash for our business. We also addressed other fixed costs by working with outsourcing partners to greatly reduce the amount spent for support services as we re-purposed many of our in-house staff to help with this spike in customer queries.
During this lockdown period, we also began to focus on automating as many potential post sales queries as possible, so we can reduce reliance on call center support in the future. Recently, we also right-sized our headcount, largely in our Packages business by shifting to variable cost-driven offline sales channels, away from high fixed cost offline channels, and optimizing some other areas where business recovery seems slower.
Collectively, our cost actions will help us reduce fixed costs as we begin to rebuild our business post-lockdown and make us a leaner and more efficient organization going forward.
Now, I would like to share some key highlights from our completed fiscal year, while Mohit will share details on our quarterly financial results.
For fiscal 2020, we achieved gross bookings of nearly $6.1 billion, a constant currency growth of 13.5%. To highlight COVID-19’s impact on our Q4 and full year results, it helps to remind everyone that our constant currency growth achieved — was over 21% year-on-year for the first nine months of fiscal 2020. For fiscal year 2020, adjusted revenue also reached a company record of over $723.4 million, representing constant currency growth of nearly 9%.
However, for the first nine months of this fiscal year, our adjusted revenue grew in constant currency by 16% year-on-year. We also achieved over 29 million room nights in our standalone online hotels business during the full year, a growth of over 12%. The full year growth was dragged down by the roughly flat units growth in our standalone hotels business during Q4.
Our domestic air market share continued to be robust and grew during the year to touch a peak of almost 30% of all domestic air passengers carried, the highest ever in our company’s history. This reflects our continued outperformance relative to markets.
During the full fiscal year, in line with our stated goals of dramatically lowering operating losses, we managed to reduce total adjusted operating losses by nearly $29 million year-over-year, driven primarily by ongoing optimization and reduction in marketing and sales promotion spends.
During Q1, while we were busy optimizing cost on all fronts, we also double down our efforts on key taken product development, which would help make our backend systems even more robust and unified. These integrations will go a long way to drive significant operating and cost efficiencies going forward.
These new online-focus products which are being developed will help further enhance the booking and post-sales support for our customers, and dramatically reduce future reliance on our call centers for post-sales support. As we are now slowly exiting various travel restrictions, we are also working closely with supply partners to drive the rebound of travel in a post-COVID-19 world.
Clearly, the primary concern for all future travelers will be that of hygiene and safety. To address this concern, we launched a comprehensive safety initiative, called MySafety. We also partnered with over 30 key travel industry leaders to launch a safety pledge, the goal of which is to reassure customers on safety and instill confidence to travel or stay.
Now, let me begin by sharing what we’ve been doing within our hotels business. As the crisis unfolded in late March, and to drive a superior customer experience, our contracting team worked very closely with suppliers to help change non-refundable bookings into full refundable rates or into free date change bookings.
Furthermore, in an effort to support the medical staff combating the COVID-19 crisis, we launched special rates for our Hotels for Heroes and Stays for Saviors programs. As part of our ongoing safe travel pledge, we partnered with suppliers to launch a self-certification program for hotel property cleanliness, called MySafety and GoSafe.
Going forward, these certified properties will also have the option to be independently verified by a large auditing firm to provide further assurances to customers.
While branded hotels also have shown keenness to participate in this program, we believe our independent hotels will gain outsized benefits going forward by joining this program.
To further ease customer’s hesitation to book, we introduced free cancellations and enhanced pay later options to give users complete flexibility and confidence in the future bookings. We are also helping our hotel partners sell vouchers that offer great value to travelers for future travel.
On the user experience front, we have launched new map-based search experience on app to make it even easier to find a hotel. As for our alternative accommodations, users can now find additional details like food arrangements available, entry procedures and highly specific directions to find their book property. During Q4, our team also launched and enhanced desktop experiences with UGC videos and pictures for brand Goibibo users.
Now, let me move on to what we are doing in our Air Ticketing business, where we continue to outperform the market. We believe our ability to gain share can only be attributed to our brand and the superior experience it delivers to the bookers.
Similar to the actions on safety and hygiene in our Hotels business, we’ve also partnered with airlines to offer touchless check-ins and luggage tag printing, in addition to highlighting all the required safety requirement set forth by the government for air travel. Our team also integrated multiple supplier sources onto our booking platform to provide future shoppers the maximum choice in price and selection for air tickets.
We also revamped our flight search engine to take advantage of this integration to better empower our shoppers. We also started to drive even deeper integration with airline partners to automate more use cases to reduce traffic on call centers going forward.
Now, turning to our Holiday business, which witnessed healthy growth in first two months of the quarter for domestic travel. However, the momentum was naturally disrupted in March, when the virus spread across India.
Currently, our team is working on post-sales automation to make future experiences with our package’s products more automated and touchless. Similarly, we had been partnering with the banks and payments providers to offer the availability of instant refunds to customers without taking on any balance sheet risk. We believe our superior technology has enabled us the ability to offer this customer-friendly feature going forward.
In Q4, our Redbus team also focused on automating much of our customer support and steering users away from call centers. During this lock down, we piloted projects with the corporate customers to utilize idle buses as a way to safety transport their employees. We are also working with public transport companies to offer online seat reservation, tools to help with social distancing while onboard.
We continue to believe that online bus ticketing remains largely under-penetrated globally, which remains a growth opportunity for us. As a result, we continue to develop our global Redbus.com site to make booking of bus ticket any place in the world possible.
Now, I would like to share some color on our corporate business, which continued to register very high growth in volumes, albeit from a low base, even as booking patterns mirrored our other domestic businesses.
During the quarter, our myBiz program continued to see strong momentum of sign ups by more than 175 mid-sized and over 1,000 SMEs. Our online corporate travel platform Q2T, also saw very robust growth and notable client wins during the quarter.
During the lockdown, we continued to strengthen our product by building in trip tagging, offering multiple fares and fares and further improved the automated spend reporting to help corporate manage expenses more effectively. Similarly, we are also working with suppliers and curating properties that can offer hygiene insurances, which help — which will be top of mind for travelers going forward.
As you can see, we have been quite busy during the lockdown to improve our existing platform and innovate new products, safety assurances and experiences. We believe our investments will help us pull ahead competitively as we now begin our business recovery.
We continue to build our technologies to ensure our future looks even better with a clear focus on automation across the customer facing experience, as well as on the back-end operations, which should help us lower costs, our structural fixed costs going forward.
At the same time, we believe, post the crisis, the MakeMyTrip Group will emerge better and stronger than other players in the market, online or offline. We also anticipate that the intense promotional spend driven environment will only continue to abate, which will further accelerate our path to better unit economics across our business segments and help with our journey to breaking even on a company level.
Now, let me hand it over to Mohit who will share more financial details of the quarter.
Mohit Kabra — Group Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, Rajesh, and hello, everyone. I would like to echo the sentiment shared already by Deep and Rajesh that these are clearly unprecedented times for everyone.
During the last reported quarter, I talked about the business crossing the $200 million milestone in terms of registered revenue, while cutting down adjusted operating loss to about $11 million and the cash loss to about $6.2 million when added back with non-cash depreciation and amortization expenses and, therefore, getting closer to our breakeven objective.
While we entered the reported quarter with the same operating momentum, we had to change gears halfway through the quarter due to the unexpected and unprecedented impact of COVID-19 on travel demand. We quickly shifted from driving growth, with improving efficiency and variable costs like marketing and sales promotions to significantly cutting down fixed costs for the next fiscal year, in anticipation of increasing travel restrictions by the end of the reported quarter.
As we started seeing the impact to demand across our various lines of business, during the first half of fiscal fourth quarter, we accelerated the ramp down of our marketing and promotional expense. As a result, despite the adverse revenue impact in later part of the quarter with lower marketing and sales promotion expense at 7.2 percentage points of gross booking versus about 9 percentage points in the previous quarters, we were able to lower our quarterly adjusted operating losses to about $11 million in Q3 — from $11 million in Q3 to about $10.3 million in Q4.
If you were to add back the non-cash depreciation and amortization expenses, our adjusted cash losses for the quarter came down from about $6.2 million in Q3 to about $5.5 million in the reported quarter.
More importantly, as India phased in nationwide down that began in late March, we quickly planned and executed significant reductions in our operating costs to minimize the cash burn in a scenario of little or negligible revenue in the next fiscal year, particularly for the quarter commencing April onwards.
First, we quickly stopped all external brand marketing spend and throttled our promotional spends across all lines of businesses to reduce our variable expenses. Next, we reviewed our semi-fixed costs within general, selling and administrative expenses or SG expenses, and quickly took actions to dramatically scale down our outsourced manpower expense.
We also worked on reducing our infrastructure or IT spend, including web hosting expenses, and have negotiated cost reliefs from multiple service providers to reduce our office expenses.
Finally, as you would have already heard, we also cut our personnel costs significantly, including almost 100% salary reduction for both our Group Chairman and Group CEO, along with approximately 50% salary reduction for members of the senior leadership team, and graded cuts going down up to 10% for other management employees.
As a result of our quick and necessary cost actions, we anticipate that our fixed costs, comprising primarily of personnel and SG expenses would come down from a monthly run rate of about $16 million to a monthly run rate of less than $10 million during the first quarter of the new fiscal, starting April ’20.
As shared by Rajesh, we have also recently rightsized some of our businesses in sync with our longer-term growth strategy to transition out of high fixed costs offline sales channels. Pre-COVID, we already started increasing our franchisee stores presence and signed up almost about 150 centers, which has allowed us to shut all our company-owned offline retail stores across the country during this crisis.
The other area of long-term rightsizing have been the dismantling of our offline teams, managing corporate events, as we believe corporate will optimize on non-essential business travels at least for some time from now.
Whilst anticipating a higher cash burn in the first quarter, in view of minimal travel during the lockdown conditions, we believe that we are past the worst with travel services gradually being restored over the last few weeks. The gradual revival of travel demand will help to build back revenues from the second quarter of the new fiscal year and help offset or prune down the fixed costs to narrow the anticipated quarterly cash burn here onwards.
In the unlikely scenario of the worsening of situation under the pandemic, we have also chalked out alternative plans to further optimize our fixed costs, but we would action this only if — instead of being eased up — travel restrictions are re-imposed.
We believe our liquidity of nearly $168 million as on 31st March, along with the cost optimization initiatives that I’ve talked about, will provide us a runway of almost two years, even if travel demand is not restored due to unforeseen worsening of the current situation.
While a zero revenue scenario is unlikely beyond a quarter or two, we feel it is prudent to be geared up for a longer period given the uncertainty of the pandemic and to be able to survive with the available cash.
It is also a matter of great comfort that the company has no repayment or interest obligations going into the crisis as it is a zero-debt company. Therefore, despite travel demand being non-existent during the last two months, we were still able to line up short-term working capital and guarantee facilities from an Indian bank to the tune of approximately $25 million for the India operations. We believe this severe travel disruption will also shake out the weaker and less capitalized competitors.
Furthermore, while there was a perceptible slowdown in the aggressive price-led disruption by various other market players, even pre-COVID, the trend is likely to accelerate in the post-COVID environment. Globally, there has been an accelerating adoption of online buying during the pandemic. Furthermore, during this lockdown, our team has been tasked to automate as much of customer’s experience with our brands as possible.
Our goal to accelerate online adoption is not just limited to the booking process, but also to the post sales process. We believe this focus will make future experiences even better, drive faster digital adoption and help us structurally keep our fixed costs lower.
Post-COVID, while the path and scale of rebuilding the business is still unclear, we believe MakeMyTrip is very well positioned to lead in the recovery of travel in the coming years.
Let me now share more details on the reported quarter. To begin with, I’d like to remind everyone that during the last reported quarter, ending December ’19, we had significantly reduced the adjusted operating losses to about $11 million and the cash burn after writing back of non-cash depreciation and amortization expenses to $6.2 million, and brought it within the range of about $10 million that we had set out to achieve during the year.
I am pleased to report that we continued with our desired cost optimization trend even in the reported quarter, where, as per management estimates, the business had achieved full adjusted operating cash profit or loss breakeven in the periods of January and February, before the impact of COVID-19 hit us in March, which led to the quarterly adjusted operating loss being about $10.3 million.
For the fiscal fourth quarter, which was partially impacted by COVID, our Hotels and Packages room night volumes declined year-on-year by 0.6% due to year-on-year decline of 0.2% in our standalone hotel bookings. While domestic bookings were slightly up, the decline was driven more by outbound bookings dropping faster.
During the quarter, we witnessed a decline of 15.4% year-on-year, in Air Ticketing segments, driven by the material year-on-year decline on outbound Air Ticketing segments as COVID-19 impacted inbound and outbound travel far earlier in the quarter than domestic travel. While domestic air travel was fine in Jan and Feb, we did witness a 33% decline in domestic air market in the month of March due to COVOID-19. While volumes declined, we were still able to grow our market share to almost 30% in the month of March.
Our Bus Ticketing business also saw severe disruption during the quarter due to the concerns about the virus and the lockdown that ensued. We believe our improving market share would have helped us achieve slower but healthy year-on-year volume growth of about 9%.
Our total adjusted revenue declined by about a third from the previously reported seasonally strong third quarter. We were able to offset the impact of this reduction with an even larger cost reduction to bring down the adjusted operating loss to about $10.9 million.
Lastly, I would also like to talk about the one-time exceptional matters recorded during the quarter. As the impact from COVID-19 pandemic worsened towards the end of the reported quarter, the Indian government imposed a lockdown across the country.
As travel came to a standstill under the lockdown, we also observed significant declines in our stock price and market capitalization. In the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2020, we performed a quantitative assessment of goodwill; and following that assessment, we recorded an impairment charge of goodwill amounting to $272.2 million, primarily related to our Goibibo business, which we had acquired in fiscal year 2017.
There has been no change in the way that the management reviews or reports the business at the segment level across our multiple brands. This non-cash charge also does not affect our longer-term operating plans for the ibibo brand, or the way we view our operating performance during the reported quarter.
We plan to continue driving synergies across our portfolio of multiple brands on the path of disciplined and financially sustainable growth, while making appropriate investments to drive online penetration in various travel segments to support the long-term growth of our company, including the Goibibo brand.
The other one-time exceptional matter is the provision of approximately over $30 million with respect to potential liabilities that could result from one of our acquisitions in the past. The provision has been created due to certain adverse awards passed by the tribunal adjudicating the matter. The awards are being strongly contested by the company in the appropriate courts. We believe that we have justifiable grounds to contest the matter and we’ll continue to do so going forward.
Given that the litigation is still ongoing with further proceedings contemplated, we do not anticipate an impact to our cash flow, if any, in the immediate future. I’d also like to confirm that these matters are not related to any routine currently operating businesses. Accordingly, both these exceptional items have been excluded in arriving at our adjusted operating losses for the reported quarter.
Before I turn over the call for Q&A, I’d like to call out that over the last few weeks, we have seen domestic flight demand being restored to about 15% to 20% of pre-COVID levels as restrictions have been gradually eased, also on other forms of travel. We believe gradual restoration of travel demand, improving online penetration, our focus on cost optimization, particularly in the short term, along with improving competitive positioning will help us not only recover but emerge much stronger from this crisis.
With that, I’d like to turn the call to the operator for Q&A.
Questions and Answers:
Operator
Certainly. [Operator Instructions]. And our first question comes from Bruce Oren from Oren Limited [Phonetic]. Your line is open.
Bruce Oren — Oren Limited — Analyst
Thank you. And thank you for taking the questions. Can you elaborate a bit about the $30.8 million litigation set aside? Hello?
Deep Kalra — Founder and Group Executive Chairman
Yes, we can hear you, sorry. Mohit, are you going to answer that? Are you on mute?
Mohit Kabra — Group Chief Financial Officer
Hi, hello. Yes, sorry. I had, kind of, kept it on the mute. I’ll take the question. Like I had mentioned, this is pertaining to one of our earlier acquisitions, which we have also reported earlier, as part of our 20-F for the last fiscal year. This is a matter which has been under litigation for a fairly long time now.
We had received some adverse awards from the tribunal, which was arbitrating on the matter. And those awards are — have gone against us. However, we have, kind of, taken those awards to the appropriate court for appealing against them, and we believe we have got good grounds to be able to get the awards reversed.
The matter is still with the courts and these are multiple awards. And therefore, we believe there will be potentially multiple levels of appeal, which will be available to us to appeal on these orders and also to resist any enforcement that might ensue.
The matter currently is under litigation and therefore it would not be possible to call out how this goes, but we have taken our provision because we have got a number on the award and the tribunal has closed its proceedings. So, we are awaiting a final judgment from the courts in the matter, but have provided for the amounts in the meanwhile. So, it’s more a one-time exceptional amount.
Bruce Oren — Oren Limited — Analyst
Thank you. And I have one last question. These are extraordinary times, we all realize. But does management have any goal for when MakeMyTrip will become a profitable enterprise?
Mohit Kabra — Group Chief Financial Officer
Like I had called out, if you see the last fiscal year that we have reported, the objective was to, kind of, get into a range of within $10 million in terms of losses per quarter. The company was able to get there in the third quarter of the fiscal year, wherein we had — our adjusted cash losses were down to about $6.2 million. In fact, even in Q4, if you see, despite part of the quarter being significantly impacted by COVID, we were able to keep the cash losses at about $5.5 million.
And within that, I have called out, as per our management estimate, the months of January, February were pretty much breakeven months, until the impact of COVID hit us very sharply in March. So, I think from a point of view of getting the business to turn a full cycle, I think we were able to achieve that during the pre-COVID period.
However, with COVID coming in now at least for the next quarter or two, there is almost like a reset of the business, because pretty much all travel services have been shut for the first two months of the fiscal — which we are already underway in, starting April.
We do believe Q1, we’ll probably see the worst of impact on the business, because revenues are going to be very meager or negligible. And therefore, we have taken significant steps to cut down the fixed costs in a big way. The quarterly run rate on fixed cost has been brought down from almost like $45 million/$50 million to less than $30 million. And therefore, we do expect that we will be able to keep the burn into the 20s, if at all, during the first highly impacted quarter. But thereafter, we should be able to improve with every passing quarter as the business recovers. So, our expectation is that we should be able to get back to that range of $10 million hopefully over the next few quarters and thereafter target breakeven.
Again, a little too early because businesses, like I said, travel services is just about started — restarted in a manner of sort — just like two to three weeks back. I think over the next quarter or so, we should get a fair color of how the trajectory is looking like and how soon can we get there.
Bruce Oren — Oren Limited — Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Rishit Parikh with Nomura. Your line is open.
Rishit Parikh — Nomura Securities — Analyst
Hi, thanks. Thanks for taking my question. Am I audible?
Deep Kalra — Founder and Group Executive Chairman
Yes, you are.
Rishit Parikh — Nomura Securities — Analyst
Okay. Thanks for taking my question and congrats on aggregation despite adversity, right? But just wanted to understand couple of things. One, from an inventory perspective, what are the trends you’re seeing in terms of that [Phonetic] and especially the S&P business? Are we seeing a lot of fallout because some of these guys will be at a margin and they’ll not able to survive this pandemic, right? So, that’s one. And then, how will that impact the take rates going into the next couple of quarters? Because there could be likely compression from airlines and from S&P. There could be likely compression in the budget hotels, right? How should we think about it going into the next couple of quarters?
Rajesh Magow — Co-Founder & Group CEO
Yes. Rishit, hi. Rajesh, here. Maybe I can just take — they’re both good questions. On the supply side, if you look at it from the Hotel business standpoint, as you know, that it has been very fragmented supply ecosystem that we have.
Our understanding and belief right now is, and this is based on all our engagement that we’ve kept it going with our partners across the board, all segments, during the lockdown as well, is that yes, there could be a possibility where very small, low budget properties, where they may feel some kind of a stress and may not be able to make it or may not be able to sustain the long-term weak revenue or slow recovery as the business comes back. But large part of hotel industry should still be able to manage. The fact is that, for quite a few of them, actually it’s not necessarily the only business, they actually have multiple other businesses, interests etc. as well. So, there could be a bit of a setback temporary of not having any business happening. But I think, just an overall business, obviously we are able to sustain it.
And lot of the other higher segment or mid segment category of hotels have already made investments. And the ones who have invested in the property, already large part of the capital investment has already happened. And again, on the fact that they have been able to just restructure their debt structures, if at all that that becomes an issue.
On all things considered, we don’t believe that there is going to be a material impact on the supply side. There could be a small fraction, percentage of supply that might not be available. And the overall supply is huge. I mean, there is — there’s no dearth of number of hotels or number of rooms, especially with the fact there is also alternative accommodations that has also opened up.
So, from an overall standpoint, we don’t believe that there’s going to be any significant impact on the supply of breadth or depth on the Hotel business side.
On the Air side, it could be, of potential, some kind of consolidation. Again, there are small number of players and we’ll have to wait and watch in that, for the domestic air market.
And international air market, again, because it has got — all the global carriers have got potentially impacted. But again, the flagship carriers, we don’t believe that there is going to be any of them going burst or going bankrupt and all. Some of the carriers might unfortunately have that kind of a challenge. As we’ve already seen, some of them have already filed for it.
But all in all, again on the Air side, we don’t really — whether it is domestic or international, given that the long-term outlook continues to be very-very strong even for domestic air market. And for whatever it’s worth, the airlines and the carriers actually have seen quite, I mean, number of times they have seen the cycles up down from various crisis in the past as well. So, we’ll wait and see how it happens.
Now, as regards to the take rate, yes, there could be temporary focus more on the distribution cost from the hotel side, and we’ve been in conversation with all of them as well. We, from our take rate standpoint on an overall basis, it’s pretty healthy, as you know, as we’ve been reporting out, close to about 22%. And that was also hand-in-hand with sales promotion that we were passing it onto the customers. So, on a net-net basis, it continues to be healthy.
There could be a temporary, kind of, small reduction, if you will, during the crisis. But at the same time, there is also going to be focus more and more on bringing the business back.
So, from our point of view, our focus is to work with the partners to make sure that the work on structures which helps both objectives, if you will. One, to ensure that you bring back the business — bring the business back for them, the volumes back for them. But also, two, if there are any specific concerns on the cost side, that we can always address based on various take rate structures, incentive-based, volume-based, slab-based etc. that we can work out. And we’ve done it in the past.
So, on an overall basis, we don’t really see — again in the specific area of take rates, any big concern. From a long-term perspective, in any case, we had been talking about and we had shared that in a steady state situation, we do have some headroom and it might settle between, anywhere between 17% to 19% or 20%. And then we have that kind of room available.
Let’s see how it goes. We, like I said, we are totally engaged with the partners and we will continue to keep addressing their concern, if at all there is some concern.
Rishit Parikh — Nomura Securities — Analyst
Okay, fair enough. Second, just wanted to understand, I think, there is a fair bit of areas that you mentioned that you’re confident of gaining share. So, just wanted to understand what are you seeing in terms of competition? I would assume on the Air side, as we see, Yatra and ClearTrip are sort of weaker, which should give us some runway. But on the H&P side, what are we seeing essentially from a competition standpoint?
Rajesh Magow — Co-Founder & Group CEO
Again, Rishit, if you look at the competition overall, so you know that we have OTA, the other OTAs, couple of them that you already mentioned and then there are global OTAs, specifically in the Hotels and Packages side. And then there has been competition from the offline world as well, all the tour operators, the traditional travel agents and so on, whether it is historically Cox & Kings and then they went out of business some time back, even pre-COVID. They were going through their own set of challenges.
So, on an overall basis, across — whether it is an offline competition or an online competition, our belief is that — and this is again coming somewhat out of the past experience as well — whenever there has been crisis, that we’ve been able to just to pull it away and emerge more stronger.
Given the brand strength and now the three-distribution platform strength that we have and the overall market position that we have in consumers’ mind for brand perception for all three brands that we have now, we believe that we would be, relatively speaking, in a better position. Given that the amount of challenge is very big right now and some of those numbers are out there in the public, whether it is the cash position for some of the players who are already public, that’s quite apparent and visible, or the cost structures or whatever kind of market share that they had.
So, and even for the offline world, given specifically for tour operators, given the fact that the international travel is going to take, relatively speaking, more time to come back, there is going to be a lot more focus on the domestic. I think actually the recovery of the travel is going to be led by domestic — domestic travel. And we are very strong on that front as well. In fact for the last quarter, we’ve been just making some serious amount of investments on our online platform to make sure that we bridge the gap if at all there was, whether it was on supply side or on our platform from a customer experience standpoint.
So, I guess all things considered, that’s what I believe is. And like I said, it is also coming from the fact that we’ve seen this happening even in the past, whenever there was a down cycle.
Operator
[Operator Closing Remarks]